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Aug 4, 2013
08/13
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so the action plan ashley reaction is don't put the fbi on the play. [laughter] cynthia talk about also the captain of the flight to let the fbi on the play they wanted to get on their the said no way i am letting the fbi come on with a gun. [applause] thank you so much. >> traditionally the role on the one hand and then on the other hand, and then on the backs of for brendan with the fact keep being in working in the laundry it is all done but then the labor to research the book to be more familiar the year ended is getting harder it is more heavier in more pelosi and more amenities and all of that from 20 years ago and is one of the top two most dangerous job categories in the united states because there are so many injuries back, shoulder, and the use that are associated with housekeeping. on the other side are cocktail waitresses in to it is fascinating with the big keening vocals i not sure if it is true or not true but consistently selz -- felt beautiful women were key to bring people in to the casino. that is the idea. but then at tiny raise lik
so the action plan ashley reaction is don't put the fbi on the play. [laughter] cynthia talk about also the captain of the flight to let the fbi on the play they wanted to get on their the said no way i am letting the fbi come on with a gun. [applause] thank you so much. >> traditionally the role on the one hand and then on the other hand, and then on the backs of for brendan with the fact keep being in working in the laundry it is all done but then the labor to research the book to be...
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Nov 17, 2013
11/13
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for instance, the fbi, all visited the fbi office and left the threat. faugh. >> 1975. so i'm just saying, there were some things. >> gentleman. >> next question, please. >> i am proud. i read you for many, many years. intellectually honest. it fits. is it not possible that they need and the desire to find a conspiracy to commit -- explain the assassination grows out of the fact that we -- the alternative is so hard -- that is to say, we would then have to accept the apparent truth that a pathetic loner brought down camelot, and to accept that then we have to look at our own selves and that meant something we don't always like to do which is that violence and death is unfair and random. >> i agree totally. >> thank you for being here. i was wondering if modern did not as you would be able to slow the zapruder found them to trace the path of the bullets of the once and for all we can tell that they all came from the sixth floor wedtech grassy knoll work there on the film. the have the technology to slow the nazi and? >> i am not aware of any technology that would be avai
for instance, the fbi, all visited the fbi office and left the threat. faugh. >> 1975. so i'm just saying, there were some things. >> gentleman. >> next question, please. >> i am proud. i read you for many, many years. intellectually honest. it fits. is it not possible that they need and the desire to find a conspiracy to commit -- explain the assassination grows out of the fact that we -- the alternative is so hard -- that is to say, we would then have to accept the...
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Nov 16, 2013
11/13
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not on fbi reports or secret service reports. and they had to evaluate the evidence and reach the conclusion that there was only one assassin and that there was no credible evidence at the time of any conspiracy. the commission members all independent experienced men had no interest whatsoever in doing anything other than finding out the truth and which of them would've taken on this national importance inside look very the evidence. and we did consider all those alternatives support the report and we've made some mistakes in the important point is that our conclusions have been examined time and time again, including by a house select committee in 1978 and 1979 whose every motivation was to find a conspiracy and they have confirmed all of our critical findings that two shots were fired and the president and the governor and there was no evidence of any kind of a second shooter and there was no fourth cartridge order this shot that had anything in dallas as far as we know. i think it has been developed in an extensive amount of t
not on fbi reports or secret service reports. and they had to evaluate the evidence and reach the conclusion that there was only one assassin and that there was no credible evidence at the time of any conspiracy. the commission members all independent experienced men had no interest whatsoever in doing anything other than finding out the truth and which of them would've taken on this national importance inside look very the evidence. and we did consider all those alternatives support the report...
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Aug 18, 2013
08/13
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he freaks out and the instead of being shot by the fbi. it's a long story in the book you can check out. out. but this sets a precedent and all of a sudden people are not just going all over the world in hijacking, they're asking for money, too. so that brings us up to what i think is the '90s year of the hijacking epidemic and serving the last year, 1972. people are jumping out of planes with $500,000. there are shootouts on playing. people are being killed. then met a couple on the cover of this book. authority told you about cathy kerkow, a 20 year-old from tuesday oregon to move to san diego working in a massage parlor at the time when she meets willie roger holder, the man who would serve for tours in the non, had to lie about his age to join the service. when he was just 17 get a twin daughter at that age, had served with a helicopter crew chief, during his third tour he had been arrested for marijuana possession in saigon and sentenced to the stockade. and that led him to become very bitter and eventually what a wall. it turns out t
he freaks out and the instead of being shot by the fbi. it's a long story in the book you can check out. out. but this sets a precedent and all of a sudden people are not just going all over the world in hijacking, they're asking for money, too. so that brings us up to what i think is the '90s year of the hijacking epidemic and serving the last year, 1972. people are jumping out of planes with $500,000. there are shootouts on playing. people are being killed. then met a couple on the cover of...
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Nov 29, 2013
11/13
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personally ordering that all 17 fbi officials who had been involved this the fbi's dealings with oswald before the assassination be disciplined. his view was such that, quote, such gross incompetence cannot be overlooked, nor administrative action postponed, end quote. assistant director belmont suggested in an addendum that it was significant that all the agents, supervises and -- supervisors and officials who had considered the issue had concluded that oswald did not meet the criteria for the security index. rather than discipline the 17 individuals, the criteria should be changed as recommended by gayle. hoover rejected this suggestion with a handwritten notation next to belmont's addendum. quote: they were worse than mistaken. certainly no one in full possession of all his faculties can claim oswald didn't fall within these criteria, end quote. hoover's deliberate false statement to the commission did not come to light until ten years later after hoover died when a congressional committee investigated the fbi's failures in connection with the assassination of kennedy. >> thank you,
personally ordering that all 17 fbi officials who had been involved this the fbi's dealings with oswald before the assassination be disciplined. his view was such that, quote, such gross incompetence cannot be overlooked, nor administrative action postponed, end quote. assistant director belmont suggested in an addendum that it was significant that all the agents, supervises and -- supervisors and officials who had considered the issue had concluded that oswald did not meet the criteria for the...
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Feb 11, 2013
02/13
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who was ignored by the fbi, and those who were calling for certain intelligence activities in certain areas we could have prevented 9/11 but we don't call that a cover-up we couldn't let it every scenario. it developed a scenario which the fbi should never do with its trading to develop one scenario and then create all of your assumptions without looking at the various scenarios the other question was this. jose rodriguez the waterboarding never occurred in your opinion. >> did he say that? he said waterboarding didn't occur. we know that it occurred. rodriquez it is typical the double standard if you are a former cia officer that says things that are attractive to the cia and the supporting of the cia, you can get things clear, so she was instrumental and conducting torture and abuse and again i don't want to become california but you do have a professor not here at the university of california berkeley. he's still in california somewhere. he had to write five memos that eric holder did release that permitted torture of a certain level. but my problem with obama has always been the t
who was ignored by the fbi, and those who were calling for certain intelligence activities in certain areas we could have prevented 9/11 but we don't call that a cover-up we couldn't let it every scenario. it developed a scenario which the fbi should never do with its trading to develop one scenario and then create all of your assumptions without looking at the various scenarios the other question was this. jose rodriguez the waterboarding never occurred in your opinion. >> did he say...
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Jan 2, 2013
01/13
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having islamic brotherhood connections, that the ridicule was profound, and that, in fact, this one fbi agent told me you cannot get even the question of infiltration by islamist terrorists into american institutions past the censors if you will, and that we are basically of the same position we were that, i guess, that at the time. comments? >> it's rude to raise such a subject, isn't it, elliot? rude that anti-communism was considered rude, rubbish, disrespectable, and members of the rotary, for example, raised anti-communism points. you know, national review was anti-communist, and it's rude to discuss these issues, isn't it? >> i think there are differences, i would say, one is that a case was made in the 1930s and 1940s, certainly, that communism was good for america, and we had this wonderful ally in uncle joe stalin. you can't make the case that al-qaeda's good for america. nobody's making that case. it is not the same as being a member of what was, at one point, at least, a public movement, and it was then a movement with wide support in parts of the intelligence. that's not tru
having islamic brotherhood connections, that the ridicule was profound, and that, in fact, this one fbi agent told me you cannot get even the question of infiltration by islamist terrorists into american institutions past the censors if you will, and that we are basically of the same position we were that, i guess, that at the time. comments? >> it's rude to raise such a subject, isn't it, elliot? rude that anti-communism was considered rude, rubbish, disrespectable, and members of the...
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Dec 9, 2013
12/13
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the fbi and the cia hated certain things but they didn't want the public to know. are negligent they were. how could they have not known about this oswald, that he got this italian mail order rifle? the guy was a nutcase and had been in the soviet union. and why didn't they know about his whereabouts? so they were very defensive, and i think that the warren commission report sort of in some ways whitewashed or omitted the failings of the fbi and the cia it but the basic conclusion i think is correct. i think the most extensive work on this is by anthony bugliosi, 1650 pages. it's an encyclopedia repeating all these conspiracy ideas, and yet they thrive. i looked the other day at amazon, and my new book was among the hardcover source of there. it was number three. the two books i had that were conspiracy, assassination books. and i really don't deal with the assassination. i just feel it's sort of beating a dead horse. >> several audience members want to know, we could have kept lbj if he had a second? >> i think unquestionably. when he put that civil rights bill be
the fbi and the cia hated certain things but they didn't want the public to know. are negligent they were. how could they have not known about this oswald, that he got this italian mail order rifle? the guy was a nutcase and had been in the soviet union. and why didn't they know about his whereabouts? so they were very defensive, and i think that the warren commission report sort of in some ways whitewashed or omitted the failings of the fbi and the cia it but the basic conclusion i think is...
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Feb 17, 2013
02/13
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the fbi that operated under the rules and the wall, think law and order, the fbi was the internal intelligence agency. well, just to give you one example, a few nights before 9/11, a telephone call was made in san diego by one of the men who would ultimately be the suicide a hijacker to afghanistan, but we couldn't track across the boundary because we didn't want the tracking of the phone calls inside of the united states by the foreign intelligence. so, what i like to have known what he said a couple days before 9/11? when he realized that of course we had an internal attack on the security, we had to sew up the gaps of the cia is what they knew about what was going on inside of the country and the fbi is what they knew about what was going on inside of the country to talk to one another and that is the the so-called patriot act you probably read about closed the scene so that was one intelligence problem. the iraq problem was a little bit different but also structural. we have as many, depending how you count them is the different intelligence agencies, the defense department has one, energy
the fbi that operated under the rules and the wall, think law and order, the fbi was the internal intelligence agency. well, just to give you one example, a few nights before 9/11, a telephone call was made in san diego by one of the men who would ultimately be the suicide a hijacker to afghanistan, but we couldn't track across the boundary because we didn't want the tracking of the phone calls inside of the united states by the foreign intelligence. so, what i like to have known what he said a...
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Feb 23, 2013
02/13
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and i think people like colin riley of the fbi who was ignored by the fbi and knows who was calling for certain intelligence activities in certain areas, we probably could have prevented 9/11. but i don't call it a cover-up. i call it inadequate in the same way the rural warren report on the kennedy assassination was inadequate, because it did not look every scenario. developed as an area which the fbi should never do in this training, develop one scenario and then create all of the assumptions around that without looking in various areas. >> the other question, the water boarding never occurred. what is your opinion? did he say that? >> he said that they did not torture. he did not say what are boarding did not occur. we know water boarding occurred. rodriquez is typical of the cia's double standard. if you are a former cia officer who says things that are attracted to the cia and supportive of the cia, you can get things cleared. rodriquez, who was instrumental in conducting torture and abuse. and that no one to pick on california, but you have a professor of here at the university of
and i think people like colin riley of the fbi who was ignored by the fbi and knows who was calling for certain intelligence activities in certain areas, we probably could have prevented 9/11. but i don't call it a cover-up. i call it inadequate in the same way the rural warren report on the kennedy assassination was inadequate, because it did not look every scenario. developed as an area which the fbi should never do in this training, develop one scenario and then create all of the assumptions...
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Nov 19, 2013
11/13
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and the fbi said there is no criminal law against that. so we are all vulnerable to what institutions other than the gm can do. in europe there are more protections. not so here. although we have some people in office, ed markey, joe barton, al franken who are concerned about these issues. and the federal trade commission is considering a "do not track" law. we have a "do not call" list so why not a "do not track" law that weprevents people from tracking us without our advance position. i think it is good idea and find full of what dave berry once said and that was the "do not call" list was the greatest government invention second only to the elvis stamp. >> but you tell the story in your book, lori andrews, of a law student of yours who tried to disable all of the cookies that track him throughout his day and it took him forever. >> it does make you forever. and that is why i think the default should be opt-in rather than opt-out. you have to try to figure out which company put them on and you cannot find out. go to the company and say c
and the fbi said there is no criminal law against that. so we are all vulnerable to what institutions other than the gm can do. in europe there are more protections. not so here. although we have some people in office, ed markey, joe barton, al franken who are concerned about these issues. and the federal trade commission is considering a "do not track" law. we have a "do not call" list so why not a "do not track" law that weprevents people from tracking us without...
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Jul 26, 2013
07/13
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mayorkas' fbi file, not once, but twice. i have to look at it again to see if maybe i missed something. nothing in my conversations with mr. mayorkas or in my review of his fbi file has convinced me that he should not at least have the option to be heard in the searing. when we spoke with him earlier this week, i asked him, i said you want to go forward with this? do you want to go forward with this and subject yourself to this kind of drilling in public under oath? and he said i am eager, i'm eager to appear. and so we're going to make that possible for you. we're delighted you're here. we welcome your brothers, james and -- >> anthony. >> glad you guys are here. i understand you have some daughters and a wife of someone else. we're happy, we are sorry they are not here with us but we are glad you are. with that having been said, i'm going to introduce our witness. we're going to swear him in and then we're going to hear from him and asked some questions. he has filed responses, submitted by this committee and had its finan
mayorkas' fbi file, not once, but twice. i have to look at it again to see if maybe i missed something. nothing in my conversations with mr. mayorkas or in my review of his fbi file has convinced me that he should not at least have the option to be heard in the searing. when we spoke with him earlier this week, i asked him, i said you want to go forward with this? do you want to go forward with this and subject yourself to this kind of drilling in public under oath? and he said i am eager, i'm...
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Jan 1, 2013
01/13
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every night i had to report to the fbi for anyone who might've come into -- checked into a hotel who didn't look like he belongs there. so i kept those notes and i looked at them over the years. i started this book 10 years ago. i started talking to people who were in my unit and they provided me with anecdotes. i looked over old newspapers, looked over old magazines. started piecing things together. ken burns says, look at a photograph on and off. the photograph comes to life. the person that had the life before the snapshot will have a life after it and you begin to again, put things together so a few take a photograph of some of the buddies at the camp, you start trying to retrace your steps. so that is what became the life and i connected all the dots. i had a lot of support. some of you in the room here, to keep pushing this thing. if i don't sign books after this event if i don't have the finale or inscription for you, i will put down, once you are done reading this book please pass it on to a young person. again, this happened 50 years ago but it happened yesterday morning. ra
every night i had to report to the fbi for anyone who might've come into -- checked into a hotel who didn't look like he belongs there. so i kept those notes and i looked at them over the years. i started this book 10 years ago. i started talking to people who were in my unit and they provided me with anecdotes. i looked over old newspapers, looked over old magazines. started piecing things together. ken burns says, look at a photograph on and off. the photograph comes to life. the person that...
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Jun 14, 2013
06/13
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you have a remarkable record is the director of the fbi. if there are questions that were not answered, we will submit them to you in writing. we would find this very important to have these additionaadditiona l pieces of information. without objection, all members have five days to submit questions for the witness or additional materials for the record. the hearing is adjourned. [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] >> the house passed today a defense bill setting department programs and policies within the next year. despite the veto threat due to another of him other positions they voted 315 to 108, which would block president obama from closing the u.s. detention facility at one time a bay, cuba. the ranking democrat, adam smith, tried to convince the house to remove that provision. here is a look. >> it was established as a facility to hold combatants captured during the war on terror. any decision must address remaining prisoners detained there. many including those responsible for the 9/11 mass
you have a remarkable record is the director of the fbi. if there are questions that were not answered, we will submit them to you in writing. we would find this very important to have these additionaadditiona l pieces of information. without objection, all members have five days to submit questions for the witness or additional materials for the record. the hearing is adjourned. [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] >> the house passed today a...
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Jan 26, 2013
01/13
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and i told him, i said, "look, i will sign for you a release from the cia, fbi, nsc, whatever you want, but prove to me that i am a security risk," and he never came up with any document to substantiate what he had said. but i believe to a great extent that he was led by other people who i was critical of because of the poor equipment that was being used in the resupply operation and, god knows, all the things that they were telling him at the time. c-span: you wrote, "one is that north had grandiose ideas about himself." what did you mean? >> guest: well, i was one time, for example, sitting in his office, and he received a phone call from somebody and he said in the telephone, "i have in front of me my chief of operation in central america," and it was at the time that i just started the work with him and there was no such an organization as a chief of operations in central america for him. i was just helping him implement the help of the nicaraguan resistance, which i strongly supported. c-span: "he also had the habit of telling people that i had been recruited by him, indeed he wou
and i told him, i said, "look, i will sign for you a release from the cia, fbi, nsc, whatever you want, but prove to me that i am a security risk," and he never came up with any document to substantiate what he had said. but i believe to a great extent that he was led by other people who i was critical of because of the poor equipment that was being used in the resupply operation and, god knows, all the things that they were telling him at the time. c-span: you wrote, "one is...
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Jan 6, 2013
01/13
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between 1917 and the fbi's act was passed in 20083 people were indicted. obama himself has been batted six. very critical of a lot of things but one is that treatment, for example, of manning and his campaign against the suns, very problematic. but this is not our enemy. in some ways we are saying is that obama refused to go after bush and cheney for war crimes they committed. being incarcerated for exposing war crimes. so if you commit war crimes you walk free. if you expose war crimes you get sent to jail but this ministration. his drum policy is very problematic. his hands-on approach to targeting people for assassination is very problematic. 300 supporters in yemen before we started are drawn campaign. last year they had 700. they have more than that now. we think it backfires. for example, the times square bomber. >> host: i'd just want to interrupt. be working on this series. impressive book. behind this, not exactly counterfactual, but counter the reason, if you will. what kind of foreign policy you think the u.s. should have? secretary of defense a
between 1917 and the fbi's act was passed in 20083 people were indicted. obama himself has been batted six. very critical of a lot of things but one is that treatment, for example, of manning and his campaign against the suns, very problematic. but this is not our enemy. in some ways we are saying is that obama refused to go after bush and cheney for war crimes they committed. being incarcerated for exposing war crimes. so if you commit war crimes you walk free. if you expose war crimes you get...
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Apr 25, 2013
04/13
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. >> the fbi briefed the house intelligence committee on wednesday about the boston marathon on main. >> i tell my kids, look, if two car pulls up and one has a stranger and the other car has dick cheney, you can in the car with a stranger. >> if you you took out the money republicans spent trying to stop health care and other money trying to get health care, could have had health care. it's amazing to be in washington d.c. with all this history and amazing building and here we are at the hilton. >> it's hard to be funny with the president of the united states what cannot you, yet some in country away day in and day out, joe biden manages to do it. >> now, a brookings institution forum on medical costs. this is an hour and a half. >> at afternoon, one and all. i am though galston can a senior fellow in governance studies here at the brookings institution. i would like to begin by welcoming everyone, including our c-span audience to this discussion of options for reforming the medicare system. the importance and timeliness of this topic should be clear to everyone. medicare is a big pi
. >> the fbi briefed the house intelligence committee on wednesday about the boston marathon on main. >> i tell my kids, look, if two car pulls up and one has a stranger and the other car has dick cheney, you can in the car with a stranger. >> if you you took out the money republicans spent trying to stop health care and other money trying to get health care, could have had health care. it's amazing to be in washington d.c. with all this history and amazing building and here...
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Jan 13, 2013
01/13
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over the last three or four weeks with members of -- group of federal and state7 officials with the fbi, homeland security and secret service and agents who fight tears and. they have pretty well figured out a qaeda domestically in terms of violence and it's pretty unlikely with the exception of small bombing that anything large would have been. but to say they don't have a handle on the infiltration going on by al qaeda through domestic intelligence agencies and the defense department so on. what they tell me as al qaeda has pretty well figured out, and the other islamist terrorist, they can't be the west by blowing us up but they will have two use use the taxes that the soviets use against us in 1930s and 40s. in fact as you go on the msha and i would challenge you that, google with the left said about challenges to the infiltration of islamic terrorism into america. what what you find his is ridiculed. you will recall when several members of congress raised the issue of hillary clinton's top aides mullah of the dean having islamic connections and that in fact told me that you cannot
over the last three or four weeks with members of -- group of federal and state7 officials with the fbi, homeland security and secret service and agents who fight tears and. they have pretty well figured out a qaeda domestically in terms of violence and it's pretty unlikely with the exception of small bombing that anything large would have been. but to say they don't have a handle on the infiltration going on by al qaeda through domestic intelligence agencies and the defense department so on....
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Dec 30, 2013
12/13
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brother and other people didn't realize it wasn't their brother and son anymore naval intelligence fbi and secret service and the doctors argued that the murdered policemen who was murdered by oswald was part of the fury and there was no end to it. the only way to think about the story is to begin with what is known. it's impossible to review some of these. how can you refused something didn't happen. the best way to think about the assassination is to begin with the known facts. where did he get it and try to kill the general and what did his wife know and what did the ballistics say look at the three men on the window and what do they hear. if you don't start with the known facts you will go down this path of conspiracy mania. they believe they've long has been done and they think that they have special ways of solving it but i think it is important for the anniversary to put that aside and think about what happened. the wife lost her husband, two children lost their father, the nation lost their president and the conspiracy stories have a way of taking away from who john kennedy was
brother and other people didn't realize it wasn't their brother and son anymore naval intelligence fbi and secret service and the doctors argued that the murdered policemen who was murdered by oswald was part of the fury and there was no end to it. the only way to think about the story is to begin with what is known. it's impossible to review some of these. how can you refused something didn't happen. the best way to think about the assassination is to begin with the known facts. where did he...
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Jun 19, 2013
06/13
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, we brought in the, in addition to the fbi, we brought in the justice department overall, we brought in, instead, we insisted that they sit down together -- not separately, together -- and make sure they were all on the same page as what were the single best recommendations that could be made. so there's a coherence to this. they all have had significant input in dealing with disasters. and so we put them together in one room with more than 100 experts from law enforcement to higher education, from k-12 teachers to first responders to emergency planners. and we said all of you come up with what you think are the best practices, the most concrete recommendations that you could give us that will enable us to teach or prepare or lay out a menu for the school districts and churches. the interesting thing is i think it surprised most people a little bit, remember eric and i sitting there, and we had the faith leaders. the faith leaders not only wanted to talk about making schools safer, they know, they're worried that their congregations are at risk. so they wanted to know what should the
, we brought in the, in addition to the fbi, we brought in the justice department overall, we brought in, instead, we insisted that they sit down together -- not separately, together -- and make sure they were all on the same page as what were the single best recommendations that could be made. so there's a coherence to this. they all have had significant input in dealing with disasters. and so we put them together in one room with more than 100 experts from law enforcement to higher education,...
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May 1, 2013
05/13
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so an eye out geneva, new york in the college president arrives the fbi. i have been cleared by the senate to be the director previously. is just start a perhaps the level of detail required for a board that meets three times a year may not necessitate it. one of the questions they would like to speak with your neighbors, we talk to your neighbors. i live on campus as a president. i live next to a fraternity. [laughter] so i had this great image of sending the fbi to knock at the door next door. but i digress. the point is there are encumbrances that efforts like this, whether the senate confirmation of his money point is i required might miss the opportunities in a very long confirmation process that sometimes distracts, delays and may even retired people's interest from serving. >> if i follow a little long in the process if mark and ambassador returning to find people to be nominated to send them to the senate. he was sitting in the senate. do you think mark's point is right that may be the one that takes, and people to have conflicts of interest. are w
so an eye out geneva, new york in the college president arrives the fbi. i have been cleared by the senate to be the director previously. is just start a perhaps the level of detail required for a board that meets three times a year may not necessitate it. one of the questions they would like to speak with your neighbors, we talk to your neighbors. i live on campus as a president. i live next to a fraternity. [laughter] so i had this great image of sending the fbi to knock at the door next...
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Oct 26, 2013
10/13
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for instance, the fbi, all visited the fbi office and left the threat. faugh. >> 1975. so i'm just saying, there were some things. >> gentleman. >> next question, please. >> i am proud. i read you for many, many years. intellectually honest. it fits. is it not possible that they need and the desire to find a conspiracy to commit -- explain the assassination grows out of the fact that we -- the alternative is so hard -- that is to say, we would then have to accept the apparent truth that a pathetic loner brought down camelot, and to accept that then we have to look at our own selves and that meant something we don't always like to do which is that violence and death is unfair and random. >> i agree totally. >> thank you for being here. i was wondering if modern did not as you would be able to slow the zapruder found them to trace the path of the bullets of the once and for all we can tell that they all came from the sixth floor wedtech grassy knoll work there on the film. the have the technology to slow the nazi and? >> i am not aware of any technology that would be avai
for instance, the fbi, all visited the fbi office and left the threat. faugh. >> 1975. so i'm just saying, there were some things. >> gentleman. >> next question, please. >> i am proud. i read you for many, many years. intellectually honest. it fits. is it not possible that they need and the desire to find a conspiracy to commit -- explain the assassination grows out of the fact that we -- the alternative is so hard -- that is to say, we would then have to accept the...
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May 7, 2013
05/13
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the fbi certifies the border is secure. that part of the equation is pretty much done. does need morees workers. the guest worker agreement between the chamber of commerce and labor that was announced seems to be pretty calibrated. it is small. why do you need a bunch of workers now. it grows with time and it seems to be reasonable. the question is will that be reflected in inflation. >> you have heard antonia suggest that if anything is going to get done on this issue, it's going to require some bipartisanship. a price to be be paid by either or both parties of something does not get done. give me your read as to whether going to be is bipartisanship forthcoming on this issue. goingon't think there is to be bipartisanship. i think there is bipartisanship. a democratto me is congressman has been a leader on this issue for years there has been torquing for years in a . partisan fashion we have seen what we don't see in congress or washington. we haven't seen as in many years where legislation is emanating out of the legislation and front. they're doing it in a bipartisan
the fbi certifies the border is secure. that part of the equation is pretty much done. does need morees workers. the guest worker agreement between the chamber of commerce and labor that was announced seems to be pretty calibrated. it is small. why do you need a bunch of workers now. it grows with time and it seems to be reasonable. the question is will that be reflected in inflation. >> you have heard antonia suggest that if anything is going to get done on this issue, it's going to...
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Nov 23, 2013
11/13
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they were telling the fbi and the fbi was preparing to free all of these people at the headquarters and then a judge in colorado ruled about this, but these are religious practices of the judge was involved in. so they dropped the investigation and the government can't do anything. the only thing that can be done is let people know what is actually happening inside this church. >> good afternoon. sheila? @> caller: hello, i am still >> caller: hello, i am still here. >> hello, this is sheila,. >> caller: there is a location called gilman springs i don't know if this is the organization that you are talking about. but it does seem that people drive by there and they have cameras and they turn the sprinklers on for people to stop by and they don't like people poking in and it's almost like a compound. >> what you are talking about is actually the international headquarters near hemet in southern california. formally an old spot. .. that's the way i interpreted it. i think it's a really wonderful and amazing representation of his influence. >> host: janet in quincy, illinois, i think w
they were telling the fbi and the fbi was preparing to free all of these people at the headquarters and then a judge in colorado ruled about this, but these are religious practices of the judge was involved in. so they dropped the investigation and the government can't do anything. the only thing that can be done is let people know what is actually happening inside this church. >> good afternoon. sheila? @> caller: hello, i am still >> caller: hello, i am still here. >>...
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Oct 21, 2013
10/13
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. >> i was pleased to see you using the fbi figures for the number of homicides per day. that number a day is very sobering. i can assure you. one of the things, and that i will make my questions brave and we can discuss them at a later date may be in indiana somewhere, the one thing that really struck me was that the number of firearms owners that we have in this country, there are about 40 a day in every state of citizens that believe that they saved their own life because they have a firearm. that comes to basically 40 times 50 is about 2000 a day people believe they saved their lives, as compared to 32 homicides. so it's really i think more of a human nature issue than a gun issue. i have a couple more points, of many. but the one thing that's important to me is that when anyone has their home invaded, who was the first responder there? it's not the police. it's the homeowner. it's the citizen who has just had their door or their window kicked him. and the police can have body armor and everything up to but not including machine guns, we as citizens as the first respo
. >> i was pleased to see you using the fbi figures for the number of homicides per day. that number a day is very sobering. i can assure you. one of the things, and that i will make my questions brave and we can discuss them at a later date may be in indiana somewhere, the one thing that really struck me was that the number of firearms owners that we have in this country, there are about 40 a day in every state of citizens that believe that they saved their own life because they have a...
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Jun 28, 2013
06/13
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these are local and state crime data collected by the fbi. and then we also have a complementary data source to the ucr and thus a national crime victimization survey. i will be focusing my comments on that. those are survey data and they really get it one of the weaknesses of the police data which is under reporting a crime what we call the dark figure of crime to get a better understanding of the crime picture and i will talk more about that in a second. these complement the military sources that you will hear more about and i won't mention too much about these because you will hear from the folks. basically it's the department of defense sexual assault database on understood your reports in the filter is that someone is come forward to get that information and then there are two surveys that are done. one is by the department of defense, the workplace gender relations survey. also the centers of disease control has done the national and partner sexual violence survey. they have done the military sample and some of that information was prov
these are local and state crime data collected by the fbi. and then we also have a complementary data source to the ucr and thus a national crime victimization survey. i will be focusing my comments on that. those are survey data and they really get it one of the weaknesses of the police data which is under reporting a crime what we call the dark figure of crime to get a better understanding of the crime picture and i will talk more about that in a second. these complement the military sources...
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Jan 12, 2013
01/13
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guantanamo are people who have been cleared for transfer, yet the cia and the department of justice and the fbi and the department of defense have left that and concluded that we're not going to prosecutor them, we don't have evidence they committed an offense and we don't believe they present a significant risk, and we don't want to keep them. but they have been sitting here year after year are after year at guantanamo because of their citizenship, primarily yemeni, because we don't trust the yemeni government to be responsibility with the detainees, which is interesting because the had the cop sent of theem meni government to fly the drones. so it seems we're a bit hypocritical in our view of the yemen. and i think guantanamo remains a stain on our reputation. recently congress passed a bill that prohibits granting visas to members of the russian government accused of human rights violations, and president obama signed it. in retaliation the russian government passed a bill that prevents americans from adopting russian children. and president president putin be signing it, had a news conferen
guantanamo are people who have been cleared for transfer, yet the cia and the department of justice and the fbi and the department of defense have left that and concluded that we're not going to prosecutor them, we don't have evidence they committed an offense and we don't believe they present a significant risk, and we don't want to keep them. but they have been sitting here year after year are after year at guantanamo because of their citizenship, primarily yemeni, because we don't trust the...
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Jun 6, 2013
06/13
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marshals service would perform, fbi in the federal system, if you compare the comparison needs to be made and not for mr. whitman's trying to get out. look at the whole gamut of costs if you're going to get to what caused it in various situations. i support the amendment a beginning step to evaluate apples versus apples. i yield back. >> mr. barber from arizona for two minutes. >> i'm speaking in favor of mr. andrews amendment seems to me than a tiny make decisions about funding a program or project, we have to know what it costs. when making decisions based upon facts. down to the detail in guantÁnamo we need to know that. seems to me we work across purposes. on the one hand we want to develop a plan that deals with the issues that relate to the release however they are released or prosecuted or imprisoned and at the same time we want to continue guantÁnamo building a bother asking the president to come up with a plan. we can't have it both ways. i want to make sure the president presents to the congress a detailed plan of how he addresses the issues raised today and overtime abou
marshals service would perform, fbi in the federal system, if you compare the comparison needs to be made and not for mr. whitman's trying to get out. look at the whole gamut of costs if you're going to get to what caused it in various situations. i support the amendment a beginning step to evaluate apples versus apples. i yield back. >> mr. barber from arizona for two minutes. >> i'm speaking in favor of mr. andrews amendment seems to me than a tiny make decisions about funding a...
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Aug 26, 2013
08/13
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edgar hoover's fbi. they had been known, and i have had perm experience of them -- personal experience of them putting in agent provocateurs in our demonstration to deliberately start trouble in order to discredit dr. king and discredit the civil rights movement. so that was a genuine concern of ours. and as marshals, our job was to keep an eye out for anybody who perhaps looked like they're starting some trouble, and if they did, to kind of surround them and get them out of there. so as my part was just to see that order was kept. >> one of the things we talked about before the panelist group started i'd like you to expand upon was the idea that many of the spark plugs behind the civil rights movement was led by college students. and we were talking a lot about the idea that i started my professional career in philadelphia, mississippi. and many may relate to that. the death of those three civil rights workers there. but you also relate the fact that there was many others all across the great state of m
edgar hoover's fbi. they had been known, and i have had perm experience of them -- personal experience of them putting in agent provocateurs in our demonstration to deliberately start trouble in order to discredit dr. king and discredit the civil rights movement. so that was a genuine concern of ours. and as marshals, our job was to keep an eye out for anybody who perhaps looked like they're starting some trouble, and if they did, to kind of surround them and get them out of there. so as my...
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May 3, 2013
05/13
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and the fbi certifies the border is secure. so we think that part of the equation is pretty much done. and on the future flow, united states does need more workers. it is an aging country. so we will need according to census we will need more workers, and the guest worker agreement between the chamber of commerce and labor that was announced seems to be to to be, you know pretty calibrate. it is pretty calibrated. it small because we have 29 unemployed, why do you need a bunch of workers right now? you don't but you will in the future. it seems to be reasonable. so we sort of get what needs to be get. now the question is, will that be reflected in this? >> enter ana. so you've heard antonio. i don't think anyone on the stage disgrace to everything to get done right now ana it's got to require some bipartisanship to be also heard antonio suggestion, i'm paraphrasing, there will be a price to be paid by either or both parties if something doesn't get done this time. so give me your reason as to whether or not there is going to be
and the fbi certifies the border is secure. so we think that part of the equation is pretty much done. and on the future flow, united states does need more workers. it is an aging country. so we will need according to census we will need more workers, and the guest worker agreement between the chamber of commerce and labor that was announced seems to be to to be, you know pretty calibrate. it is pretty calibrated. it small because we have 29 unemployed, why do you need a bunch of workers right...
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Jan 15, 2013
01/13
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as a matter of fact, during 2010, there were more than 76,000 cases referred by the fbi to the justice department to read do you know how many were persecuted out of 76,000 in 2010? the last year we have data for? 44 triet knott 44,000, 44 out of 76,000. this is a joke and it's a sad joke. these are felony cases involving criminals trying to buy guns at our federal government is prosecuting less than one-tenth of 1% of them. it is shameful and it has to end and the president can do it by picking up the phone and saying to the justice department this is your job, dewitt oral will get somebody that will. further, the president can make a recess appointment to head the federal bureau of the alcohol tobacco and firearms. the atf as it is called hasn't had a director for six years. can you imagine how much outrage there would be if we were without a homeland security secretary for six years? this is as much a public safety threat as it would be if there were not a secretary for homeland security. if the congress keeps blocking the atf appointees all the president has to do is make a recess
as a matter of fact, during 2010, there were more than 76,000 cases referred by the fbi to the justice department to read do you know how many were persecuted out of 76,000 in 2010? the last year we have data for? 44 triet knott 44,000, 44 out of 76,000. this is a joke and it's a sad joke. these are felony cases involving criminals trying to buy guns at our federal government is prosecuting less than one-tenth of 1% of them. it is shameful and it has to end and the president can do it by...
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Mar 9, 2013
03/13
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pendergast is a fbi agent. i, the sense i get from their books is he's very tall and almost an albino. very interesting looking guy. he can use a gun, but he's one of these guys that more often solves crimes with his mind. they wrote a whole series, one of the earliest ones was cabinet of the your cowsties which is -- your curiosities which is a tremendous book. they then got the relic which was made into a-off i have, but it doesn't feature pendergast even though he's in the book very slightly, and then they have a series, dance of death and wheel of darkness and a couple of others. those are tremendous fiction books. >> host: are members of steppenwolf still alive? >> guest: i don't know. >> host: what was their biggest hit? >> guest: of course, "born to be wild." and we got them on their reunion tour. and it was all the original members, you know? and growing up in rock and roll, and these were some of the earlier guys, so by then hendrix and the fudge and zeppelin and all the rest were out there, you look b
pendergast is a fbi agent. i, the sense i get from their books is he's very tall and almost an albino. very interesting looking guy. he can use a gun, but he's one of these guys that more often solves crimes with his mind. they wrote a whole series, one of the earliest ones was cabinet of the your cowsties which is -- your curiosities which is a tremendous book. they then got the relic which was made into a-off i have, but it doesn't feature pendergast even though he's in the book very...
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Mar 3, 2013
03/13
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prendergast is the fbi agent. i -- the sense i get from their books is he's very tall and almost an albino. very interesting-looking guy. he can use a gun, but he's one of these guys that more often solves crimes with his mind. they wrote a whole series, one of the earliest ones was "cabinet of the curiosities" which is a tremendous book. they then got "the relic" which was made into a movie, but it doesn't feature pendergast, even though he's in the book slightly. and then they have a series, "dance of death" and "wheel of darkness" and a couple others. those are tremendous fiction books. >> host: are members of steppen wolf still alive? >> guest: i don't know. >> host: what was their biggest hit? >> guest: these were some of the earlier guys, so by then hendrix and zeppelin, all the rest were out there. you look back at those early guys, all those guys with were just, you know, they were so lame. and when i heard them in concert, my jaw dropped at how tight and how professional they were. we just had newfound re
prendergast is the fbi agent. i -- the sense i get from their books is he's very tall and almost an albino. very interesting-looking guy. he can use a gun, but he's one of these guys that more often solves crimes with his mind. they wrote a whole series, one of the earliest ones was "cabinet of the curiosities" which is a tremendous book. they then got "the relic" which was made into a movie, but it doesn't feature pendergast, even though he's in the book slightly. and then...
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Apr 26, 2013
04/13
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working with the administration, by the way, and in some of the smart people at the fbi and other agencies, that so, we are completely open to amendments that would, in any way prevent what happened in boston. i hope nobody has any illusion about that. >> agreed. >> let me ask you one off of immigration and that is about sequester and flight delays. as you know there is dispute how to best handle the airline delays being caused by the sequester. "the wall street journal" reports this morning that some democrats want legislation that would deal just with the air travel portion of the sequester. majority leader reid is having sequester itself be repealed. can you both speak to what you think needs to be done if anything about the air travel delays? >> well, yes. i mean look, my, the best solution is to undo sequester and replace it with more rational types of cuts. and that would be, you know, leader reid has anment which got a lot of support on our side, none on the other side, to use oco. having said that, i noted that last night jay carney, the president's spokesperson, said that he would
working with the administration, by the way, and in some of the smart people at the fbi and other agencies, that so, we are completely open to amendments that would, in any way prevent what happened in boston. i hope nobody has any illusion about that. >> agreed. >> let me ask you one off of immigration and that is about sequester and flight delays. as you know there is dispute how to best handle the airline delays being caused by the sequester. "the wall street journal"...
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Feb 16, 2013
02/13
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boston globe reporters dick ware and gerard o'neil recount the life of infamous boston gangster and fbi informant. look for these titles in bookstores this coming week and watch for the authors in the near future on booktv and on booktv.org. >> if you cut demand for somebody's product per day by 50% you must have crushed prices. here's what happens. the average amount medicare reimburses. day in a hospital has grown by 5 x. sixty% decline of the number of patients, 5 x increase in the price. we shall be so lucky. i want to be in that business. there's another statistic which is entirely sort of irrelevant but fascinating. hospitals tell medicare what their costs are so that medicare can compare the price they paid to hospitals costs. and those 30 years that medicare increased the price by five times hospitals reported that their costs had increased three times so the interesting thing is our demand in any industry that would be devastating. medicare paid five times more but the hospitals say they're getting reimbursed 40% of their costs down from 70%. one of my most put it is you have t
boston globe reporters dick ware and gerard o'neil recount the life of infamous boston gangster and fbi informant. look for these titles in bookstores this coming week and watch for the authors in the near future on booktv and on booktv.org. >> if you cut demand for somebody's product per day by 50% you must have crushed prices. here's what happens. the average amount medicare reimburses. day in a hospital has grown by 5 x. sixty% decline of the number of patients, 5 x increase in the...
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Sep 21, 2013
09/13
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that was the fbi. i blame us for hoover. arbitrary secret power for 50 years. whoever studies american government in sixth grade. i blame us. here is diane nashua is black and cannot devote herself, she is assuming responsibility for j. edgar hoover instead of a sense of victimhood. that is an amazing example to me of the kind of wisdom these young people, she was only 23 years old when she was doing all this stuff with j. edgar hoover. there's a lot of wisdom here and there are no easy answers. it really does make our history enthralling. >> keep it on. on the subject of this national gridlock, fort dietrich to develop party specific plague. for one side or the other i don't care which. what do you think is the past forward. stupid, crazy gridlock. >> you got to apply your heart, soul, mind and body to detach from people on the other side from the irrationality they are trapped in the anti big government side seems to me pretty much reached a cul-de-sac because there's a larger and larger body of people, it appeals to fear, anxiety but also tried in the sense
that was the fbi. i blame us for hoover. arbitrary secret power for 50 years. whoever studies american government in sixth grade. i blame us. here is diane nashua is black and cannot devote herself, she is assuming responsibility for j. edgar hoover instead of a sense of victimhood. that is an amazing example to me of the kind of wisdom these young people, she was only 23 years old when she was doing all this stuff with j. edgar hoover. there's a lot of wisdom here and there are no easy...
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Aug 22, 2013
08/13
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there are like two rival cartels or two rival mafias, but they have an interest in making sure that the fbi or the, you know, is weak in that sense. so it's possible that they can be competitors, which i think they certainly are. they certainly theologically are very different. i mean, al-qaeda theologically considers judaism to be very much, you know, a deviation of the true faith. but that said, i think they have and they can cooperate when they see they have an advantage of doing so. i think that there was some degrees of cooperation, for example, in iraq. and so it's a kind of on again/off again. >> yeah. i mean, this is another one of these questions that you could use a whole other panel to discuss. i think the bottom line is right now if you just look at it tactically right now, obviously, syria is a huge disagreement between the two. a huge, looming, major problem, even bigger wedge between the two, and you see coming out of al-qaeda's senior liters anti-iranian rhetoric involving syria. the one thing which really i've marveled at when i review the history is how many times, however
there are like two rival cartels or two rival mafias, but they have an interest in making sure that the fbi or the, you know, is weak in that sense. so it's possible that they can be competitors, which i think they certainly are. they certainly theologically are very different. i mean, al-qaeda theologically considers judaism to be very much, you know, a deviation of the true faith. but that said, i think they have and they can cooperate when they see they have an advantage of doing so. i think...